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Laura's avatar

Depressing or not, your weekend columns are welcomed. How else can we understand the day-to-day madness if we don't read/hear thoughtful insights and analysis from those in the know?

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Katie's avatar

I don't know whether to laugh or to cry. The author of a depressing Substack on depressing topics that only masochists are inclined to read becomes himself so hopeless that he questions why anyone wants to read what he writes and furthermore why/whether he wants to write it.

Maybe the operative word here is "wants." Speaking for myself, no, I do not WANT to read depressing articles, and I understand why you do not WANT to write them. Nonetheless, I NEED to understand these matters, as depressing as the current state of them is, and I hope that you NEED to communicate that depressing state to anyone who NEEDs to understand it.

We too often turn a blind eye to the abyss, increasing the likelihood that we will fall into it. Better to acknowledge and to understand that we are edging toward the precipice, while we can perhaps correct course, than to be dumb-founded as we plunge into 'unforeseen' catastrophe. Many catastrophes are foreseeable: the financial crisis, Russia's invasion of Ukraine (good god! Putin had been telegraphing that one for over a decade!), the devastating effects of climate change (over a half-century of warnings about that one), even Hamas' assault on Israel (I mean, really, they publicly posted videos of training exercises!). Ignorance is bliss only until the moment it bites you in the ass.

A spoonful of sugar may help the medicine go down, but we've become a people who WANT all sugar all the time. Failing to take our medicine insures that we will eventually embrace the sugar-high of our ignorance so thoroughly that we'll succumb to whatever "rough beast slouches toward" Washington to be reborn (Thinking of you, DJT!).

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